Hot Stamper Pressings of Living Stereo Recordings Available Now
Subtitle: it’s also hard to imagine that space and time are two aspects of the same reality, spacetime, but that’s why we employ the scientific method to test our theories and prove ourselves wrong.
We here at Better Records like testing records. We want to know if the predictions we make about the titles we play are accurate, which is simply to say, do they match the data derived from our blinded shootouts?
In the case of the stampers for this mystery title, it turns out that our whatever intuitions we may have had going in would have been no help at all. Who could possibly predict that, for sound quality on side one, 13s would substantially beat 12s, 12s would beat 15s, and that 15s would beat 11s. Side two was even wackier: 10s badly beat 12s, 12s beat 11s, and 11s beat 20s.
I can detect practically no pattern in these numbers, on either side. They seem pretty random.
But we don’t have a problem with random numbers because the person sitting at the table playing the record and the person in the listening chair grading the sound of that record never know what the stampers are for any of the records they are playing. This should be standard practice, but it seems nobody in the audiophile world practices it but us and Robert Brook.
Hot Stamper Pressings of the Music of The Who Available Now





Hot Stamper Pressings of Mercury Living Presence Records Available Now
Hot Stamper Pressings with Demo Disc Sound Available Now